Libya's lessons for Iran The UN's sanctions against Iran are too modest– it needs to remember how it learned to stop Libya's former nuclear ventures Bennett Ramberg 2/15/2010 Guardian Original Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/feb/15/iran-united-nations-libya/print International efforts to prevent Iran from developing nuclear weapons will be given a new lease on life this month, as France assumes the presidency of the UN security council. As council president, France, which shares America's views about the need to strengthen sanctions on Iran's government, can raise the matter – something that China eschewed during its tenure in January. But, even were a revived Franco-American effort to succeed in getting the UN organ to endorse targeted penalties to hamstring the financial underpinnings of the Revolutionary Guard and other Iranian elites, the proposed measures appear to be too modest. They add little to three prior sanction resolutions banning the export of nuclear and ballistic-missile technology and conventional arms, and freezing the assets and travel of a handful of Iranian officials. Moreover, despite the pain they impose, economic sanctions historically have a poor record of prompting countries to change fundamental policy. But there is a notable exception to this pattern: Libya's decision in December 2003 to abandon its nuclear weapons programme. The country's dramatic shift from the nearly quarter-century effort to get the bomb marks a remarkable proliferation reversal – and sanctions played a key role. How those sanctions worked in tandem with other forms of pressure provides hope that they may yet help turn Iran around. If nothing else, Muammar Gaddafi's efforts to acquire nuclear weapons were far more audacious than Iran's. The saga began within a year of Gaddafi's 1969 overthrow of King Idris. With no wherewithal to manufacture a nuclear bomb, Gaddafi sought to buy one. During the 1970s, he approached China, India, and Pakistan. Fortunately, despite the fact that India and Pakistan lay outside the nuclear non-proliferation treaty (NPT) – and thus were not subject to its prohibition on disseminating arsenals – they, along with China, rebuffed his requests. Undaunted, he sought to acquire technologies to produce the weapons. Here, the non-proliferation dikes failed. Gaddafi exploited a network of opportunity. French-controlled mines in Niger provided uranium ore. An undisclosed country conveyed a pilot uranium conversion facility. And the Soviet Union followed with a research reactor from which Libyan scientists extracted small amounts of plutonium. But it was the father of Pakistan's nuclear programme, AQ Khan – and his network – that furnished the technological linchpin: the rudiments for a nuclear centrifuge program. And the Pakistanis added a nuclear weapon design as well. As Libya mounted its effort, the International Atomic Energy Agency remained clueless. Despite published speculation about the country's nuclear intentions, the IAEA considered Libya to be NPT-compliant. The absence of international resistance normally would have allowed Libya a clear field to realise its ambition. But Gaddafi's hubris and revolutionary zeal blunted the goal by stimulating the imposition of international sanctions that ultimately brought down his nuclear programme. By 1988, Libya's clash with the west reached its apex with the bombing of Pan Am 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland. Until then, the United States had led a lonely battle to isolate Libya by severing diplomatic relations and imposing economic sanctions and embargos on oil imports and arms exports. But not even the Reagan administration's 1986 military strike would move Libya away from its confrontational ways. Prompted by the Lockerbie tragedy, security council sanctions adopted in 1992 and 1993 changed the dynamic. To force Libya into handing over the plotters, compensating victims' families and ceasing terrorism, the council froze all air commerce in an out of the country, all aircraft maintenance, and all arms shipments, as well as reducing diplomatic representation. In addition, a freeze on Libya's financial assets abroad and exports of oil equipment cost the country an estimated $33bn in revenue, exacerbating already high unemployment and inflation rates. As a result, the government's confidence and hold on power were shaken. Military coup makers and Islamists felt encouraged to contest the regime. They were brutally suppressed, but the sanctions nonetheless provoked an internal battle within Gaddafi's coterie that pitted hardliners committed to the anti-western crusade against pragmatists who promoted integration into the global economy. Confronting continued albeit fraying sanctions, Gaddafi threw his weight behind the pragmatists, turning the Lockerbie bombers over to face trial, renouncing the terrorism that he had promoted, and expelling the foreign terrorists who made Libya their home. In 1999, the security council responded by suspending sanctions. But the nuclear programme remained a laggard. Gaddafi continued to import nuclear technology secretly, even as his diplomats privately negotiated a modus vivendi with the US and UK. In October 2003, Italian inspectors of a German ship moored in Taranto, Italy, uncovered a stash of centrifuges bound for Libya. Faced with the re-imposition of harsher measures, and with the pragmatists continuing their push to steer the country in a new direction, Gaddafi relented, trading the nuclear programme for political normalisation. On 31 May 2006, the US reopened its embassy in Tripoli, ending the quarter-century hiatus in diplomatic relations. The demise of Libya's nuclear venture offers a template for dealing with Iran. It suggests that seriously challenging the nuclear venture will come not from more timid sanctions now, but from measures that encourage the pragmatists who populate the fractious Iranian government to promote normalisation. The time to implement such a strategy is long overdue.